Me neither. I tried talking to her when I was at the palace last week, and she can’t even speak English.

The “Pitch Perfect 2” star told Seth Meyers on “Late Night” Thursday that there’s no reason to get all worked up.

“I don’t know why anybody cares about the royal baby. It’s a baby,” said Kendrick. “It hasn’t done anything. It hasn’t achieved anything. It was just born.”

It’s safe to assume, with how often Ann Kendrick calls Princess Charlotte “it,” they won’t be having a “Pitch Perfect” marathon at the palace anytime soon. If you’ve been asleep or vacationing in the Arctic or something, know that Prince William and Kate Middleton welcomed Princess Charlotte to the world on May 2 in London.

Hey — if she ever signed a contract to work for Disney, would that make her a Disney Princess?

Anyway, Kendrick said she was actually in England when the big birth happened.

“Americans care a little bit, but when I was in England, it was like the city had gone crazy. There were all these flags up and there were people baking special cakes at lunch to have in celebration of the royal baby,” she said. “I was like, ‘The baby doesn’t know you’re doing that! The baby doesn’t care!’ And the baby was on a full page of the Daily Mail.”

“It just looks like every baby!” she said. “All babies look like sacks of potatoes!”

Rep. Jerrold Nadler of New York, the top Democrat on the Judiciary Committee, said there was nothing wrong with the officials expressing “private political views via private text messages.” Strzok, in particular, “did not say anything about Donald Trump that the majority of Americans weren’t also thinking at the same time,” he said.

By William Booth | Washington Post LONDON – At $1 billion it is the most expensive embassy ever constructed. But its designers say the new American chancery on the Thames River marks a paradigm shift in design: the U.S. Embassy here will exude openness, while hiding all the clever ways it defends itself from attack. After decades of building American...

State regulators are due to consider a plan to replace power from the Metcalf Energy Center in south San Jose with alternative electricity sources, including battery storage. If implemented, the plan could boost PG&E customers’ utility bills.